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How to Get Overdraft Fees Waived: Phone Scripts and Strategies for Every Bank

Get overdraft fees reversed with proven phone scripts. Bank-specific strategies for Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and credit unions.

Last edited on May 17, 2026
6 min read

How to Get Overdraft Fees Waived: Phone Scripts and Strategies for Every Bank

Americans pay over $8 billion annually in overdraft and NSF fees — typically $35 per transaction, often for purchases under $10. A single forgotten bill can trigger a cascade of fees totaling $100-$200+ before you even realize your balance went negative.

The good news: banks waive overdraft fees far more often than people think. A polite phone call succeeds 80%+ of the time for first-time requests, and even repeat requests have decent success rates. Here's exactly what to say.

Universal Phone Script (Works at Any Bank)

Step 1: Call the number on the back of your debit card

Step 2: When connected to a representative, say:

"Hi, I noticed an overdraft fee of $[amount] on my account from [date]. I understand this was due to [brief acknowledgment — e.g., 'a timing issue with my direct deposit' or 'miscalculating my balance']. I've been a customer for [X years] and this isn't typical for my account. Is there any way you could reverse this fee as a one-time courtesy?"

If they say yes: Thank them and confirm the credit will appear.

If they say no, try:

"I understand. Is there a supervisor available who might have more flexibility? I really value my relationship with [bank name] and would appreciate any consideration."

If supervisor also says no:

"I appreciate you looking into it. Could you note on my account that I requested a waiver? I'd also like to know — how can I set up alerts to prevent this from happening again?"

Bank-Specific Strategies

Chase

  • Fee: $34 per item (max 3 per day = $102 max daily)
  • Policy: Chase has reduced fees and offers a 1-business-day grace period to deposit funds
  • Best approach: Call or use the Chase app to request a fee reversal
  • Success rate: High for first-time requests; Chase customer service generally has authority to reverse 1-2 per year
  • Tip: Mention you're considering switching to a fee-free bank

Bank of America

  • Fee: $35 per item (max 2 per day = $70 max daily)
  • Policy: $50 overdraft cushion (no fee if overdrawn by less than $50); eliminated NSF fees in 2022
  • Best approach: Call or visit a branch; mention your total relationship (credit cards, mortgage, investments)
  • Tip: BofA's Preferred Rewards customers get better treatment — mention your tier

Wells Fargo

  • Fee: $35 per item; 24-hour grace period to cover the overdraft
  • Policy: Clear Access Banking account has no overdraft fees; standard accounts charge per-item
  • Best approach: Call or use online chat; note the 24-hour grace period — if you deposited within 24 hours, argue the fee shouldn't apply
  • Tip: Ask about switching to Clear Access Banking if overdrafts are frequent

PNC

  • Fee: $36 per item
  • Policy: Low Cash Mode gives extra time before fees hit; Virtual Wallet accounts have different rules
  • Best approach: Request reversal through the app or by calling

U.S. Bank

  • Fee: $36 per item
  • Policy: Eliminated NSF fees; overdraft fees reduced
  • Best approach: Call and mention account tenure

Credit Unions (General)

  • Fees: Typically $25-30 (lower than big banks)
  • Success rate: Very high — credit unions are more member-focused
  • Best approach: Call or visit; credit unions waive fees more readily and frequently

Banks With No Overdraft Fees

Consider switching if overdrafts are a recurring problem:

Bank Overdraft Fee Alternative
Capital One $0 Auto-declines or covers small overages
Ally Bank $0 $100 overdraft cushion, no fee
Discover $0 Auto-declines debit purchases
Citibank $0 Eliminated overdraft fees entirely
Alliant Credit Union $0 Courtesy coverage at no charge
Chime $0 SpotMe covers up to $200
SoFi $0 Up to $50 overdraft coverage free

Prevention Strategies

1. Set Up Low Balance Alerts

  • Set alerts at $100, $50, and $25 thresholds
  • Get push notifications before you overdraft
  • Available in all major banking apps

2. Link a Savings Account for Overflow

  • Most banks allow auto-transfer from savings to checking when balance is low
  • Transfer fee (if any) is typically $5-10 — much less than a $35 overdraft fee

3. Opt Out of Overdraft Coverage

  • Under Regulation E, you can opt out for debit card and ATM transactions
  • Transactions will simply be declined — no fee
  • Checks and ACH may still overdraft, but daily spending won't

4. Use a Buffer Strategy

  • Keep a $200-500 mental "zero" in your checking
  • Don't spend below this buffer
  • Treat it as invisible money

5. Align Bill Due Dates With Payday

  • Call billers and request due date changes to align with your pay schedule
  • Reduces the chance of bills hitting before your deposit clears

If You're Charged Multiple Fees at Once

When one overdraft triggers a cascade:

"I understand that [X] fees were charged on [date]. These all resulted from a single timing issue — my deposit posted one day late and triggered all of these. I'm asking for a reversal of the full $[total] since this was one event, not [X] separate incidents. Can we work something out?"

Banks often reverse all fees from a single incident even if they won't routinely waive multiple fees.

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Called bank within 1-2 days of the fee posting
  • [ ] Used polite, non-demanding language
  • [ ] Acknowledged the overdraft without making excuses
  • [ ] Mentioned tenure as a customer
  • [ ] Asked for supervisor if first rep said no
  • [ ] Set up low-balance alerts to prevent future overdrafts
  • [ ] Considered opting out of overdraft coverage for debit transactions
  • [ ] Evaluated switching to a no-fee bank if overdrafts are frequent

Bottom Line

Never pay an overdraft fee without at least attempting to get it waived. An 80%+ success rate for first-time requests means the 5-minute phone call is almost always worth it. If overdrafts happen regularly, the better solution is prevention — alerts, opt-out, or switching to a fee-free bank entirely. The banking industry is moving away from overdraft fees under regulatory pressure, and consumers have more fee-free options than ever.

Sources

  • CFPB Overdraft Fee Report: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/research-reports/data-point-overdraft-nsf/
  • Federal Reserve Regulation E: https://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/regecg.htm

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